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Wyszukujesz frazę "Sienczyk, Marcin" wg kryterium: Autor


Tytuł:
Znaczenie aktywności proteazy kapsydowej CP w rozwoju infekcji alfawirusowych
The role of capsid protease CP activity in the development of alphaviral infections
Autorzy:
Torzyk, Karolina
Skoreński, Marcin
Sieńczyk, Marcin
Tematy:
alfawirusy
arbowirusy
proteazy serynowe
proteaza kapsydowa CP
inhibitory
alphaviruses
arboviruses
serine proteases
capsid protease CP
inhibitors
Pokaż więcej
Wydawca:
Polskie Towarzystwo Chemiczne
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/2200548.pdf  Link otwiera się w nowym oknie
Opis:
Alphaviruses belong to the worldwide distributed Togaviridae family and Alphavirus genus. They are spherical, enveloped, single-stranded RNA arthropodborne viruses. Alphaviruses are mostly transmitted by mosquitoes (Aedes spp. and Anopheles spp.) and are geographically distributed in restricted areas where appropriate vectors are present (Fig.1.). The most recognized members of this genus are Sindbis (SINV), Semliki Forest (SFV), Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEEV), Ross River (RRV), and Chikungunya (CHIKV) viruses. Alphaviruses are infection agents for humans and many animals. Clinically, most human infections with arthritogenic alphaviruses are associated with symptoms such as fever, headache, joint pain, rash, chronic arthritis, and encephalitis. Major events during the alphaviral infection are virus entry, replication, assembly, and budding of new virions. Alphaviral RNA encodes four nonstructural and five structural proteins. Nonstructural proteins are mainly involved in the replication process and virus pathogenesis, while structural proteins form new virions. Both groups of viral proteins are produced as single polyproteins which undergo autoproteolytic maturation. This process is carried out by the two viral proteases, cysteine protease nsP4 and C protein serine protease (CP), and is considered to be critical for virus replication. The capsid protease CP is a chymotrypsin-like serine protease with the catalytic triad including His145, Asp167, and Ser219. What is important, after a suicidal autoproteolytic event the side chain of Trp267 remains bound in a hydrophobic S1 pocket thus inhibiting further trans-proteolytic activity. Alphaviral capsid protein undergoes a single proteolytic reaction before maturation and then, after selfinactivation, it assembles to form a viral capsid shell. Inhibitors of the capsid protease have significant antiviral activity. Compounds belonging to this group can be good candidates for new antiviral drugs.
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Was the serine protease cathepsin G discovered by S. G. Hedin in 1903 in bovine spleen?
Autorzy:
Palesch, David
Sieńczyk, Marcin
Oleksyszyn, Jozef
Reich, Michael
Wieczerzak, Ewa
Boehm, Bernhard
Burster, Timo
Tematy:
spleen cells
Hedin
cathepsin
proteases
Pokaż więcej
Wydawca:
Polskie Towarzystwo Biochemiczne
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1039945.pdf  Link otwiera się w nowym oknie
Opis:
In the beginning of the 20th century, enzymes with proteolytic activity were classified as peptidases, Erepsin, and proteases. Among these, pepsin, trypsin, and autolytic enzymes were of the protease class. Spleen-derived proteases were poorly characterized until Sven Gustaf Hedin performed several digestion experiments with bovine spleen. He incubated minced bovine spleen under acidic or neutral conditions and characterized two active proteases; the results were published in 1903. The first protease was named α-protease and was active under neutral conditions. The second was named β-protease and was active under acidic conditions. We replicated Hedin's experiments according to his methods and found, by using activity-based probes to visualize proteases, that the historical α-protease is the present-day serine protease cathepsin G (CatG), which is known to be important in several immune processes, including antigen processing, chemotaxis, and activation of surface receptors. The β-protease, however, comprised different proteases including CatX, B, S, and D. We suggest that Hedin described CatG activity in bovine spleen over 100 years ago.
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
First phosphonic‐type inhibitors and activity‐based probes specific to the Onyong‐nyong virus capsid protease
Autorzy:
Pyrć, Krzysztof
Torzyk-Jurowska, Karolina
Grzywa, Renata
Łupicka-Słowik, Agnieszka
Sieńczyk, Marcin
Chykunova, Yuliya
Opis:
The O'nyong-nyong virus (ONNV) is a member of the Alphavirus genus isolated for the first time in 1959 in Gulu (Uganda). The main symptoms of O'nyong-nyong fever are nonspecific and flu like; a proper diagnosis at the early stage is challenging. Until today, the first ONNV epidemic in 1959-1962 remains one of the largest arbovirus outbreaks ever recorded (over 2 million cases). No specific therapy is available thus far. Capsid protease (CP) is a chymotrypsin-like serine protease that catalyzes the autoproteolytic maturation of the structural polyprotein and undergoes self-inactivation upon the release of the mature capsid (C) protein. Despite the discovery of this virus more than 60 years ago, many aspects of CP remain understudied, including substrate specificity. Herein, the structures of the first phosphonic-type inhibitors and activity-based probes specific to the ONNV CP are presented.
Dostawca treści:
Repozytorium Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
Artykuł

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